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| A tiny jewelry case |
I knew it would come to this. As much as I’d like to have
more mixed-media materials on hand when I’m sketching on location, the various supplemental
kits I’d been trying the past several weeks just weren’t working. I don’t mind carrying
an auxiliary tote bag on sketch outings for things like a larger sketchbook and
a water bottle, but having to fuss with a supplemental tool case inside the
tote is a fumbly problem. My everyday-carry bag on the left; a tote on the
right; going back and forth and forgetting which tool is on which side, all
while standing on a sidewalk – AACCKK!
It was time to go back to the drawing board.
My goal: Eliminate a supplemental case and instead carry a few mixed-media materials in my usual Rickshaw pen case, which fits so nicely inside my everyday-carry Rickshaw bag (both shown in this post).
My problem: Every time I’ve tried to carry a few Caran d’Ache Neocolor II crayons in the pen case, the short crayons would be difficult to dig out of the case, or they would fall down horizontally and no longer be visible.
With that basic problem identified, I looked for a solution that would somehow raise the crayons in the pen case so that they would be visible like the taller pens and pencils. The solution would also have to be narrow enough that the crayons couldn’t fall down sideways.
Those of you who sew can probably see an easy solution: Make a small fabric pocket inside the pen case. Sadly, I no longer have a sewing machine, nor any fabric scraps (all sewing things unused for many years, they were downsized). I’m also lazy.
Amazingly, I found something that was exactly the right dimensions: A tiny fabric case intended to hold jewelry during travel (top of post). I have never used it for that purpose, but when it was given to me years ago, it seemed like something I might someday have a use for. That day finally came.

Six crayons fit perfectly and can't fall down sideways.
Six Neocolor crayons fit perfectly and can’t fall down sideways. Breakage would still be an issue, but I might consider swapping in a couple of Derwent Inktense Blocks instead of Neos at some point. As a
trial, I’ve simply clipped the jewelry case to the upper edge of the pen case.
If it works out, I’ll sew it into place permanently (thankfully, I do still
have a hand-sewing kit).
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| Clipped into place for now. |
As for the kit’s contents, I started over completely. With crayons coming in, some pencils had to come out. It was a good opportunity to cull a couple of unused pens that had crept in over time, too. The current selection is shown below.
Following my general color guidelines, I chose a warm and a cool of each hue in a mix of Caran d’Ache Museum Aquarelle pencils and Neocolor II crayons. Several choices still fall in the category of ones I wouldn’t normally “see” in my typical urban landscape, so I’m hoping they still push me outside my usual box.
The two non-soluble pencils are Derwent Drawing pencils in Chocolate and Grape. Those two pink Neocolors are for spring blossoms, of course. The swatches were trials to see what kinds of greens I could mix with the palette’s yellow and blues.
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| Newly MacGyver'ed kit: Let's see how this goes. |


























